FDA’s Number Of Generic Drug Approvals Up 90 Percent From 2014

The FDA approved 781 generic drugs in fiscal year 2018 after approving 763 in fiscal year 2017, according to analysis by PricewaterhouseCoopers’ Health Research Institute. Those numbers compare to 409 in fiscal year 2014 and 651 in fiscal year 2016. None of the numbers include tentative approvals.

#FDA is taking new steps to lower costs of generic drug development; increase high-value generic approvals that benefit sponsors and patients; and improve the economics of generic development to foster competition, reduce barriers to entry, improve access: https://t.co/FE8qMrqxWa

The Trump administration has been outspoken about its goal of bringing down drug prices, especially through competition between brand drugs and generics.

Congress gave the FDA additional authorities “designed to speed the approval process” with the Generic Drug User Fee Act that took complete effect in 2014. More recent “substantial changes” in 2017 have really swelled the number of approvals, according to the Health Research Institute (HRI) report.

Industry-paid user fees, also known as “generic drug user fees,” added up to $493 million in fiscal year 2018 compared to $299 million in fiscal year 2013 when the FDA started collecting user fees, according to HRI.

The fees “account for 7 percent of the FDA’s annual budget and allow the regulator to hire more review staff and make infrastructure improvements such as new computer and data analysis systems that have helped accelerate review target times and meet targets more consistently,” according to HRI.

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